United States. Bureau of Land Management. Lakeview District(March 3, 2008)

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United States. Bureau of Land Management. Lakeview District
2008-10-03T20:53:30Z
2008-10-03T20:53:30Z
2008-03-03
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/7375
14 pp. Table, references, appendices, map.
T. 40 S., R. 11 E., Sec. 9 N1/2NW1/4, SENW, Willamette Meridian.
Date of Finding of No Significant Impact is February 27, 2008. Captured March 6, 2008.
Proposes to sell 120 isolated acres of BLM-administered public land by modified sale to the highest bidder. Includes the surface and mineral estates and the value of ponderosa pine timber, except oil, gas, and geothermal resources. The proposed sale stems from a request by Bob Stewart of Klamath Cascade Group and is being considered to meet Congressional instructions to compensate Klamath County for the loss of local tax revenues associated with acquisition of the Wood River Ranch.
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application/pdf
en_US
NEPA
Public lands -- Oregon -- Lakeview Region -- Management
Public land sales -- Oregon -- Lakeview Region
East Stukel modified competitive land sale environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact
Environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact: East Stukel modified competitive land sale
Other

United States. Bureau of Land Management. Lakeview District(February 27, 2008)

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United States. Bureau of Land Management. Lakeview District
2009-11-17T17:18:38Z
2009-11-17T17:18:38Z
2008-02-27
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/9970
14 pp. Tables, appendices, references, maps. File provided by Klamath Falls Resource Area, October 21, 2008.
This request is being considered to meet Congressional instructions to compensate Klamath County for the loss of local tax revenues associated with acquisition of the Wood River Ranch. The purpose of this environmental assessment is to identify, analyze, and reduce where possible, any potential impacts associated with sale of these public lands, if approved.
en_US
Environmental assessment;OR-014-05-06
Public lands -- Oregon -- Lakeview Region -- Management
Public lands -- Oregon -- Klamath County -- Management
East Stukel modified competitive land sale environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact
Environmental assessment : East Stukel modified competitive land sale
Other

Gast, Gerry
Meller, Espirito
2014-08-05T19:04:57Z
2014-08-05T19:04:57Z
2014
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/17975
Project consists of three files in PDF format. 99 page Thesis, 45 page Research & Programming document, and Final Studio Boards in three pages.
The Central Eastbank Waterfront is a unique opportunity to restore a healthy river-based lifestyle to a major city. The district should be river in character, not only location. The new image of Portland is a bustling, riverside creative industrial district where people live, work, and recreate; built at a human scale; with a healthy Willamette riverbank in the foreground and Mount Hood in the background. Portland's Eastbank District is an amazing healthy riverfront with robust water recreation and access, where you can play in the water and catch a salmon on your bike or kayak ride home...all the while being within a stone's throw of the downtown commercial core. The vision will be enabled by new zoning and development policy that makes medium scale mixed-use (industrial/commercial/residential) development financially accessible and required.
en_US
University of Oregon
All rights reserved
Portland, Oregon
Willamette River
Eastbank Church
urban design
regeneration
mixed-use development
Eastbank Community Church: Making and Healing Community
Terminal Project

White, Eric M.
Bennett, Drew E.
Ellison, Autumn
2016-01-28T21:58:49Z
2016-01-28T21:58:49Z
2015
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19623
2 pages
Restoration projects on national forests often have far-reaching economic effects that extend beyond local areas around the national forests. To better understand the distribution of economic effects from restoration projects on eastern Oregon national forests, we examined timber sales and service contract records for timber harvesting and forest and watershed restoration treatments on the national forests between 2009 and 2014. We found that service contractors and timber buyers across the state benefit from restoration on eastern Oregon’s forests with a large number of contractors and buyers located in the Willamette Valley and southern Oregon.
This publication was supported by funding from the Oregon Department of Forestry and the US Forest Service, Grant #13-DG-11062765-723.
en_US
Ecosystem Workforce Program, Institute for a Sustainable Environment, University of Oregon
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Eastern Oregon restoration benefits businesses statewide : distribution of timber buyers & service contractors : fact sheet 6
Other

Holler, Reno
2010-01-26T11:39:01Z
2010-01-26T11:39:01Z
2009
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/10127
Many would agree that communication between the school and home is crucial to a child’s success. It is through these exchanges of information that most parents find out about programs, nighttime activities, school events and functions and their child’s progress concerning grades and development. The question is, if communication is so important, then why do most school use the most expensive, labor intensive and untimely manner to contact student families? If a typical school year is thirty-six weeks long and the first progress report goes out at week nine, then the student could have been potentially failing 25% of the course material before the family is even made aware of their child’s poor academic standing. Depending on the material being taught, some would say that it would be too late for the child to remediate their grade. There are faster, less expensive modes for reaching out to parents, such as the Easy Grade Pro (EGP) software, which serves students, parents, teachers and administrators by increasing communication between parents and the school, primarily through daily or weekly e-mail. This plan considers whether through the sending of frequent e-report cards, there will be an increase in parental satisfaction with communication levels.
en_US
High school
Education, Secondary
Secondary education
Assessment
Parent
Parental involvement
Easy Grade Pro
Grading programs
Software
Grades
Communication in education
Families
Families
Easy Grade Pro: Frequent and Early Assessment Combined with Increased Parent Communication
Plan or blueprint

Rubin, Elizabeth Cutler
2010-05-27T20:45:02Z
2010-05-27T20:45:02Z
2010-06
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/10383
24 p. Examining committee chair: Dr. Doug Blandy
The motivation for this capstone paper came from a recent internship at the James Beard Foundation, a culinary arts foundation in New York, NY. In this environment it was quite apparent that food and eating were regarded as intellectually stimulating and aesthetically inclined. The chef was admired as an artist, and the food, examples of his craftsmanship, was appreciated and enjoyed according to its sensory appeal. Through an extensive literature review of the aesthetic attitudes present in the fields of sociology, philosophy, and the fine arts it was understood that, according to many scholars, gastronomy and gastronomic experiences were not seen as aesthetically significant to the human environment, and, in some cases, were even documented as insignificant aspects. My approach to confront this gap in the research and to better understand the reverence observed in New York, involves the connection between the act of eating and the act of viewing art. The bridge was discovered through the writings of John Dewey (1934), a philosopher and education theorist whose seminal text, Art as Experience, expands the definition of art and aesthetic experience. The two questions that guided my process were the following: Can gastronomy be considered an aesthetic experience as Dewey proposes?; and are analytical methods used to evaluate museum experience transferrable to the aesthetic experience of gastronomy and, specifically, how can these tools be implemented to evaluate culinary events?
Through close reading of Dewey’s definition of the terms “aesthetic,” “experience,” and
“perception,” it was found that gastronomy could be connected to visual art through the shared relationship between the doer and the perceiver. It is by this affiliation that the perspective of the diner is augmented and the importance of sensory engagement enhanced. Despite the difference in their constituent parts, the experience of eating and the experience of viewing art can both be described as creating an aesthetic unity that brings participants closer to what they are experiencing, whether in a museum or restaurant setting. The last section strove to make practical the newfound alignment between eating and visual art. It was proposed that several museum theories used to analyze visitor experience be applied to diner experience. Specifically, the Model of Contextual Learning by Falk and Dierking (1992) was incorporated as a way to deconstruct the nebulous perceptual process of enjoyment.
en_US
University of Oregon capstone; Arts and Administration Program,
M.S.
Gastronomy
Aesthetics
Experience
Aesthetic attitude
Thick and thin senses
Perception
Eating as Experience: Connecting Gastronomy to Visual Art Through the Philosophy of John Dewey
Other

Norgaard, Kari
Havlik, Brooke
2014-06-17T19:38:57Z
2014-06-17T19:38:57Z
2014-06-17
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/17882
While scholars and activists have analyzed the consequences of a largely white, middle-class membership in the alternative food movement, lesser consideration has been given to the relationship food has with gentrification processes. On Chicago's West Side, alternative food spaces such as gardens, restaurants and farmers markets are staking a physical and cultural claim in longstanding communities of color. Food is perhaps unique and more powerful than prior initiators of gentrification such as art due to its mundane, everyday qualities that intersect with its ability to uphold class distinctions. Using qualitative interviews, participant-observation and a literature review, I will examine how alternative food contributes to and is a form of resistance against the uprooting of longstanding Puerto Rican and Mexican communities on Chicago's West Side. Readers who have an investment in the alternative food movement must be conscientious of these tensions and consider resisting gentrification by creating inclusive, intercultural food spaces.
en_US
University of Oregon
All Rights Reserved.
Alternative Food
Community Gardens
Farmers Markets
Gentrification
Eating in Urban Frontiers: Alternative Food and Gentrification in Chicago
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
M.S.
masters
Environmental Studies Program
University of Oregon

Echo (Or.)
2006-06-16T01:53:50Z
2006-06-16T01:53:50Z
2002-12
http://www.echo-oregon.com/CHAPT-7%20comp%20plan.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/2870
19 pp. Referenced map not included. Bookmarks modified by UO. Adopted October 18, 1978. Revised 1986. Last revision December, 2002. Captured June 8, 2006.
The following statement of goals and policies provide a general long range basis for decision making relative to the future growth and development of the City. The goals are patterned after and are in direct response to applicable Oregon Statewide Planning Goals. The policy statements set forth a guide to courses of action, which are intended to carry out the goals of the Plan. The policy statements present the City's position on matters pertaining to physical improvements and community development. [From the Plan]
325274 bytes
application/pdf
en_US
City of Echo (Or.)
City planning -- Oregon -- Echo
Community development -- Oregon -- Echo
Land use -- Oregon -- Echo -- Planning
Echo : Comprehensive plan
City of Echo municipal code, Title 7: Comprehensive plan
Book

East Central Oregon Association of Counties
Echo (Or.)
Markus, Henry S.
Umatilla County (Or.). Planning Dept.
2009-05-04T18:27:15Z
2009-05-04T18:27:15Z
1979-03
Scanned by UO from item HT168 .E34 E27 1979
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/9074
516 pp. Maps, tables, forms, appendices. Published March, 1979. Scanned by UO from item HT168 .E34 E27 1979, April 2009.
The comprehensive plan is the public's conclusions about the development
and conservation of the area, adopted by the appropriate City Councilor
the County Commissioners, and agreed to by all affected governmental units.
It is the only, all inclusive, plan for a given geographic area.... The technical portion of this report provides the background information,
facts, and considerations that served as the basis for development of the
city's comprehensive plan. [From the Plan]
"The preparation of this report was financed in part
through 1976-77 and 1977-78 Planning Assistance Grants
from the Oregon Land Conservation and Development Commission
(LCOG)."
en_US
City of Echo (Or.)
City planning -- Oregon -- Echo
Land use -- Oregon -- Echo -- Planning
Community development -- Oregon -- Echo
Echo : Comprehensive plan, implementation measures, and technical report (1979)
City of Echo comprehensive plan, implementation measures, and technical report : March, 1979
Book

Echo (Or.)
2006-02-10T02:40:45Z
2006-02-10T02:40:45Z
1989-05-19
http://www.echo-oregon.com/zoning%20chpt%209.pdf
http://www.echo-oregon.com/subdivision%20chpt%208.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/2237
Zoning code, 81 pp. Subdivision code, 57 pp. Referenced zone map not included. Latest revision May 19, 1989. Zoning code captured January 5, 2006; subdivision code captured February 1, 2006.
Development codes are ordinances implementing a local government's comprehensive plan. They include two components: a zoning ordinance and a subdivision ordinance, which may be adopted and published as separate documents under their own titles. In some cases the sections pertaining to subdivision of land may be included in the zoning ordinance.
334267 bytes
934433 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
en_US
City of Echo (Or.)
Land use -- Law and legislation -- Oregon -- Echo
Zoning law -- Oregon -- Echo
Land subdivision -- Law and legislation -- Oregon -- Echo
City planning -- Oregon -- Echo
Echo : Development code
Zoning ordinance of the City of Echo, Oregon
Subdivision ordinance of the City of Echo, Oregon
Book

Echo (Or.); David Evans and Associates; Umatilla County (Or.); Oregon. Dept. of Transportation(City of Echo (Or.), June , 2001)

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Echo (Or.)
David Evans and Associates
Umatilla County (Or.)
Oregon. Dept. of Transportation
2007-05-25T21:03:15Z
2007-05-25T21:03:15Z
2001-06
DVD provided by Oregon Dept. of Transportation
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4202
114 pp. Includes maps and figures. Published June 2001. Received from ODOT January 2, 2007.
The City of Echo Transportation System Plan (TSP) guides the management of existing transportation
facilities and the design and implementation of future facilities for the next 20 years. This Transportation
System Plan constitutes the transportation element of the city's Comprehensive Plan and satisfies the
requirements of the Oregon Transportation Planning Rule established by the Department of Land
Conservation and Development. It identifies and prioritizes transportation projects for inclusion in the
Oregon Department of Transportation's (ODOT's) Statewide Transportation Improvement Program (STIP). [From the Plan]
2173916 bytes
application/pdf
en_US
City of Echo (Or.)
Transportation -- Oregon -- Echo -- Planning
City planning -- Oregon -- Echo
Land use -- Oregon -- Echo -- Planning
Central business districts -- Oregon -- Echo
Echo : Transportation system plan
City of Echo transportation system plan : Final report
Book

Echo
Oregon
Echo
2014-04-01T20:57:26Z
2014-04-01T20:57:26Z
2007-08-24
Echo 001-07 ADOPTION
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/14308
90 pp. Adopted 2007-08-24. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment
City of Echo Commercial District Renovation, Development and Refinement Plan, intended to improve economic vitality, serve as Management Plan for City's STA, amend the Zoning Ordinance to improve downtown development standards, identify right of way improvements and other capitol expenses.
en_US
Echo
Public Domain
Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development
Land Use
Echo Notice of Adopted Amendment (2007-08-24)
Adopted Plan

Echo
Oregon
Echo
2014-04-02T16:38:43Z
2014-04-02T16:38:43Z
2010-08-25
Echo_001-10_ADOPTION
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/15266
27 pp. Adopted 2010-08-25. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment
Adoption of a new floodplain ordinance, floodplain study, and floodplain maps in order to comply with FEMA requirements. The proposed ordinance is attached and the floodplain maps are incorporated by reference as "The Flood Insurance Study for Umatilla County, Oregon and Incorporated Areas, dated September 3, 2010. The floodplain study and new floodplain maps for the city of Echo are available at DLCD through the Natural Hazard Coordinator. The code chapters amended are Definitions 9-2-2 & Flood Hazard Overlay 9-3-5.
en_US
Echo
Public Domain
Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development
Land Use
Echo Notice of Adopted Amendment (2010-08-25)
Adopted Plan

Johnson, Mark
Rodriguez, Aaron
2014-09-29T17:43:43Z
2014-09-29T17:43:43Z
2014-09-29
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/18345
Immanuel Kant's claim that morality is a matter of rational judgment is perhaps the apotheosis of a tradition within ethical philosophy that sought certainty with regards to how one ought to live or what one should to do in any given situation. Although this strand still lingers in various guises in contemporary moral philosophy, pragmatism has set itself up as a response to this quest for ethical certainty. Yet, with its anti-absolutist commitments, pragmatist approaches to ethics struggle with the articulation of a prescriptive moral philosophy. Virtue ethics, however, with its focus on the general dispositions of agents, suggests itself as a viable model for a normative pragmatist moral theory. Moreover, in moving away from the view that moral progress is a form of knowledge-acquisition, pragmatist ethics opens the door for a host of possible influences for our ethical development. In this dissertation, I argue that aesthetic experience, as elicited by the work of art, can significantly inform our ethical lives by cultivating in us what I consider to be the cardinal pragmatist virtue, openness. For, not only does this disposition, which John Dewey describes as a “hospitality towards the new” and a “willingness to be affected by experience,” prove salutary in regards to the pursuits of individual flourishing and social melioration, but one can also construct a system of norms and values upon it while not contradicting pragmatism's anti-absolutist commitments. Engagements with art can help foster this virtue, I argue, because the work of art helps unsettle the conceptual systems of interpretation we often over-rely on in moral inquiry, and thus expands our horizons of possibility for human meaning and action.
en_US
University of Oregon
All Rights Reserved.
The Echo of God's Laughter: Aesthetic Experience and the Virtue of Openness within a Pragmatist Ethics
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
Ph.D.
doctoral
Department of Philosophy
University of Oregon